Still on the theme of
veterans this week, some pictures from a trip I took a while ago. I called it
my “700 Years of Wine and War” tour—driving from Strasburg to Caen primarily
visiting battlefields from Crécy to Normandy.
(But also making a
pilgrimage to Rheims and Épernay, the fountainhead of Champagne.)
In retrospect, I don’t
recommend doing that many battlefields and military cemeteries in that short a
time, because there’s not enough wine to wash away the sense of loss, futility
and anger that you feel. Seven hundred years, for heaven’s sake; and still at
it. (At the time I went, the battles-du-jour were in Bosnia and Rwanda.)
I concentrated on
conflicts of the 20th Century, in particular on the Western Front
battlefields of World War I. Which were legion. I won’t go into details of that
trip, but here are a few of the many, many military graveyards I visited.
First, the
Meuse-Argonne American military cemetery. It holds the largest number (more
than 14,000) of our soldiers in Europe, most of them from the campaign of the
same name in 1918. The crosses just go on forever.
The area around Ypres
was fought over essentially from October 1914 to October 1918; historians talk
about the Battles of Ypres—from the First up to the Fifth. After about the first 20 minutes of that time it was nothing
but a roiling sea of mud; in all those years
the lines couldn't have shifted more than a few hundred yards in either
direction.
And
Tyne Cot Commonwealth Graves cemetery near Passchendaele stands witness to the
British losses.
I
don't know how Tyne Cot stacks up in terms of size of Commonwealth War Graves,
but it's just staggeringly huge, with more than 11,000 graves, surrounded by
this enormous wall.
Then
you come to find out that the wall is engraved with the names of those I refer
to as "the lost but never found"--men whose remains were never found,
or who didn't leave enough of their remains to be identified. It's stunning to
walk past panel after panel--think the Vietnam Memorial that won't quit; tens
of thousands of names. And then you learn that they actually ran out of wall
before they ran out of names.
(I
mentioned this on Facebook and was somewhat taken aback by this comment from a “FB
friend”—you know the sort I mean: “I do wonder how many of those lost but never
found were in fact successful deserters.” This is someone who lays claim to
being cultured and educated, who takes umbrage at the expression of any views
not fully aligned with his own and feels free to scatter his opinions authoritatively
far and wide. But he doesn’t seem to read posts very thoroughly before
bestowing his comments, so I’ve stopped paying attention to them. In this case,
however, I did note in passing how gobsmackingly crass he was being. Well done,
you!)
Tyne
Cot is huge, but there are other, smaller, cemeteries in the vicinity. Here’s Polygon
Wood—just a small graveyard in the midst of a cornfield.
One
of the more moving memorials is at Vimy Ridge. Vimy was contested from 1914,
when the Germans took it. Successive attempts by French and French colonial
regiments just couldn’t dislodge the Germans. Finally, in April 1917, the
Canadian Corps took and held the high ground.
When
you go to Vimy, there’s the park, and a memorial sculpture and the engraved
list of Canadians killed in France with no known grave.
Note
that H.W. Parry served as H.W. Madden. The minimum age for enlisting as a
volunteer was 17, but boys of 15 or 16 would take the name of
an older man; so "served as" usually means someone not yet 17. There
are right many of them listed on that memorial.
The
French gave Vimy to the people of Canada, and Canadian students staff the
memorial, take you on tours. You have to walk on designated paths because of
unexploded ordnance. And they use sheep to keep the grass down, because even
the weight of a mower could set that stuff off--96 years after the Canadians
finally took the ridge from the Germans.
I
was appalled to realize that the forward observation trenches from the two
sides are about 50 meters apart. I just sat down and cried, right there.
Near the battlefield
of Beaumont-Hamel is this stunning memorial to the Newfoundland regiment that
fought there.
But there were others
on the Western Front. My photos of the huge cemetery at Verdun—a six-month
battle that was begun with the expectation by Falkenhayn that he would “bleed
the French Army white”—aren’t particularly good. But there are plenty of other graveyards,
especially in the Somme corridor.
The area around
Albert has many. I was taken by this grave—one named soldier, three “inconnus”.
Three unknowns.
Or these two stones—one
for a Jewish soldier, one for a Muslim (probably from one of the colonial
regiments. Both Britain and France pulled on their empires to feed the meat
grinder of the Western Front.)
Both “died for France”.
There
are German military cemeteries in the area, too—although not as many nor of the
size of the Brits and French. Here’s one in the Albert region:
The
Germans mark their graves with black metal crosses--except for the stone one, which
was for a Jewish soldier. (I'm told
that during the German occupation of 1940-44, the Jewish markers were
destroyed, but they’ve been replaced since.)
It's
a small cemetery, and you think, "So, not many died here." And then
you realize that each side—front and back—of the crosspiece has either a name
or an "unknown" on it.
See
what I mean about not packing too much of this into a couple of weeks? After a
while, there’s just not enough wine.
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